Widget Image
Follow PPD Social Media
Sunday, January 12, 2025
HomeStandard Blog Whole Post (Page 118)

A factory worker at a New York manufacturing plant. (Photo: Reuters)
A factory worker at a New York manufacturing plant. (Photo: Reuters)

The Empire State Manufacturing Survey headline general business conditions index fell 5 points to 3.7, well below the consensus forecast. The reading for March is the third straight month below 10, an indication growth has been a bit slower so far this year than in 2018.

The consensus forecast was looking for 10.0, with forecasts ranging from a low of 8.0 to a high of 14.1.

Thirty percent (30%) of respondents reported that conditions had improved over the month, while 25% said conditions worsened. The new orders index fell five points to 3.0, indicating that orders grew at a slower pace than last month.

The shipments index declined 3 points to 7.7, the lowest reading in more than two years. Unfilled orders inched higher, and delivery times and inventories were little changed.

The labor market was solid in March.

The index for number of employees climbed ten points to 13.8, a clear signal of hiring, though the average workweek index turned negative for the first time since 2016.

The prices paid index moved higher, rising seven points to 34.1, which suggests a pickup in input price and explains some of the workweek declines. The prices received index fell five points to 18.1, indicating selling price increases slowed.

Overall, manufacturing firms are optimistic about the future, though slightly less so. Optimism surrounding the six-month outlook was only slightly lower than last month.

The index for future business conditions ticked down three points to 29.6. The indexes for future new orders and shipments were also slightly below readings from the month prior, but firms expected solid increases in employment and hours worked in the months ahead.

The capital expenditures index was little changed at 28.3, indicating investment is on the way, and the technology spending index came in at 20.3.

The Empire State Manufacturing Survey headline general

Presidents Donald Trump, left, and Ronald Reagan, right, graphic concept.
Presidents Donald Trump, left, and Ronald Reagan, right, graphic concept.

The Democrats were all over the news complaining about Donald Trump’s “rosy” economic forecasts, especially for growth in the American economy. Of course, we heard for three years that the current growth we had could not be obtained, or that Trump would need a “magic wand” to bring back the astounding number of manufacturing jobs he indeed has. 

​This all sounds so familiar. Let’s see, where did we hear this before? Oh yeah! In the Reagan years.

​If there is a word that should be banned from pundit and Democrat talking points, it’s “rosy. When Ronald Reagan submitted his budgets replete with substantial tax cuts in 1981, virtually all the economic “insiders” insisted that his forecasts were “rosy.” There was no way the American economy could recover, let alone reach the growth levels his team projected. In fact, the economy—as it did with Trump—began to turn around almost instantly. Business Outlook, in May 1981, reported that spending for durable goods and gross private domestic investment each had shot up a whopping 22%. Those were indicators of confidence, something that a genuine leader produces. Typical of this confidence was Armco Steel, one of America’s largest steel producers, which announced a plan for a $1.96 billion expansion after the inauguration. 

​But the most amazing thing of Reagan’s remarkable recovery is that even his team underestimated and under-projected growth rates!

​That same month, May 1981, economist Jerry Jordan even sent Murray Weidenbaum, the chairman of Reagan’s economic advisors, a memo in which he cautioned that talking about realexpected declines in inflation might seem “Pollyannish to observers” but that real output growth was “much greater” than outside observers predicted. Sure enough, a month later, a compilation of GNP growth estimates by six universities and private firms showed they concluded the economy would growing by 6.5% over the next year. 

​Reagan’s projections in every case were lower than the outsiders” . . . on purpose. Marty Asher, who compiled the data from, among others, Wharton, Chase Econometrics, and Merrill Lynch, found that the real rate was “recently revised to 8.4%.” But Reagan went with the lower rate in public. 

​The same thing occurred with inflation estimates, and once again, complaints about a “rosy” forecast were flat wrong. By 1986, Reagan’s team publicly used a money velocity rate of 5.5% but internal estimates were a full two points lower. Those proved correct. As early as July 1981 Weidenbaum told Reagan to ignore the immediate numbers: the long-term rates were very good and “quite strong.” A glum Democrat Speaker of the House, Thomas P. “Tip” O’Neill moaned, “I’m getting the s*#t whaled out of me” by the President.

​Even foreign leaders noticed the change immediately. Helmut Schmidt, the chancellor of the Federal Republic of Germany visited the Gipper in May 1981, and saw in America “a natioin of upswing and optimism,” whereas in Europe “pessimism reigns.”

​But in the very short term, squeezing inflation and waiting for the investment to kick in rode to O’Neill’s rescue, temporarily blurring the big picture. The media, of course, loved it: “the New York Review of Books said a “stench of failure hangs over Ronald Reagan’s White House,” and Fortune claimed investors were “terrified” of the tax cut. (Later, even Time magazine—a reliable Reagan-hating publication—admitted that other media outlets had been overly “antagonistic” in their campaigns against the President. When Reagan’s budget director, David Stockman, betrayed the administration with complaints about the big deficits, the opposite was occuring. From late 1981 to 1982, most insiders thought Reagan had oversold the deficits, not the tax cuts, and many pointed out the deficits were not as harmful as even Dutch predicted.

​All the while, Reagan’s support of Federal Reserve Chairman Paul Volcker and his crusade to squeeze out inflation remained firm. Indeed, members of Congress began discussing ways to impeach . . . Volcker! Most of Dutch’s staff agreed, saying “Volcker is killing us.” But the Gipper knew better. He had to tame inflation without sacrificing the tax cuts. And he did.

​Unemployment soon gave way, followed by inflation, which was down to 5% by the end of 1981. The stock market crept upward. By the second quarter of 1982 the economy grew at a stunning 8.7% rate and whereas some forecasts had 1983 down for a 5% decline, instead over the next twelve months private sector investment shot up by over 23%. Virtually every projection Reagan made came true, with the exception of balancing the budget. And those “rosy” projections? The White House’s internal numbers were always closer to reality, and higher,  than anything discussed in public. As the Gipper himself joked, “The best sign that our economic program is working is that they don’t call it Reaganomics anymore.” 

​What the overwhelming evidence from the Reagan Papers shows is a powerful rebuttal to the notion that Dutch “knew the tax cuts wouldn’t work.” At every turn, the Reaganites were understating real economic growth and lower inflation. It turns out the Gipper’s rosy projections weren’t rosy enough!

Critics are all over the news complaining

Weissmann Best Known for Prosecutorial Misconduct on Enron Task Force

FILE PHOTO: Federal prosecutor Andrew Weissmann (C) is flanked by FBI agents as he speaks to the press outside the federal courthouse in Houston, Texas, U.S., May 1, 2003. (Photo: Reuters)
FILE PHOTO: Federal prosecutor Andrew Weissmann (C) is flanked by FBI agents as he speaks to the press outside the federal courthouse in Houston, Texas, U.S., May 1, 2003. (Photo: Reuters)

Andrew Weissmann, the controversial prosecutor dubbed Robert Mueller’s “Pit Bull,” is leaving the special counsel investigation. His departure is the strongest indication to date that the so-called Russia probe is coming to a close.

The departure also comes as newly-released, damning testimony casts doubt on the genesis of the Russia probe.

As PPD previously reported, Mr. Weissmann has built a reputation as a politically-motivated prosecutor, who knows how to play the media even as he commits serious ethics violations.

For example, citing “sources familiar” with the development, PBS News just reported he “will study and teach at New York University and work on a variety of public service projects, including his longstanding interest in preventing wrongful convictions by shoring up forensic science standards used in courts.”

They correctly reported Mr. Weissmann was the architect in the case against former Trump campaign chairman Paul Manafort, who was just sentenced to a total of 81 months in federal prison.

To negate the potential for a presidential pardon, Mr. Weissmann’s friends at the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office indicted Mr. Manafort on related charges just moments after the second sentencing hearing. The 16-count indictment violates with the state’s long-held observation that state charges mirroring federal charges constitute double jeopardy, as well.

Ethics complaints against Mr. Weissmann were brought before the First Judicial Department Disciplinary Committee in New York after the Justice Department (DOJ) said he and then-Chief White House Counsel Kathryn Ruemmler “plainly suppressed” evidence favorable to the defense when he was a federal prosecutor leading the Enron Task Force.

While the Fifth Circuit ruled that the more than 6,000-plus pages of evidence withheld from former Merrill Lynch manager James A. Brown’s attorneys would not have helped his case at trial, it was not the end of the story.

Sidney Powell, who served as lead counsel in more than 500 federal appeals, filed an ethics complaint against Mr. Weissmann along with William Hodes, one of the bar’s leading ethics experts. It alleged he not only hid evidence but also called “cooperating witnesses” who gave what he knew to be false testimony.

“During his years on the Enron Task Force, Prosecutor Weissmann was widely known for intimidating witnesses, hiding evidence, and unethical and heavy-handed, if not illegal, tactics,” Ms. Powell stated.

Fortunately for him, the New York Bar decided to secretly kick it over to the Office of Professional Responsibility at DOJ. The Justice Department was supposed to be making the case against him, but ended up on both sides of the complaint.

The 5th Circuit Court of Appeals reversed the majority of convictions in the case against Merrill employees, and he was pushed out.

“Weissmann quietly resigned from the Enron Task Force just as the judge in the Enron Broadband prosecution began excoriating Weissmann’s team and the press began catching on to Weissmann’s modus operandi,” Powell noted.

More recently, Mr. Mueller’s second praised Deputy Attorney General Sally Yates for disobeying President Donald Trump on an executive order the U.S. Supreme Court has since upheld. The High Court ruled the order was “squarely within the scope of presidential authority.”

But on the night of January 30, Mr. Weissmann wrote to Ms. Yates under the subject line, “I am so proud.”

“And in awe,” he added in the body of the email. “Thank you so much. All my deepest respects.”

He was chosen by Mr. Mueller even though it was revealed he donated at least $4,300 to Democratic candidates, including Mr. Obama and Mrs. Clinton. He attended the latter’s election night party.

Andrew Weissmann, the controversial prosecutor dubbed Robert

New Home Sales, a Volatile New Residential Sales Report, Showed 4.1% Decline Year-Over-Year

Real Estate Market Going Up Concept Illustration. (Photo: AdobeStock)
Real Estate Market Going Up Concept Illustration. (Photo: AdobeStock)

New home sales in the U.S. came in slightly below the consensus at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 607,000, but December was revised higher to 652,000.

The consensus forecast was 612,000, with forecasts ranging from a low of 590,000 to a high of 640,000.

While December soared, this number for January is a 6.9% decline from the prior month and 4.1% below the January 2018 estimate of 633,000.

Sales Price

The median sales price of new houses sold in January 2019 was $317,200. The average sales price was $373,100.

For Sale Inventory and Months’ Supply

The seasonally‐adjusted estimate of new houses for sale at the end of January was 336,000. This represents a supply of 6.6 months at the current sales rate.

New home sales in the U.S. came

On this episode of Liberty Never Sleeps, Tom asks why liberal clowns are given any power when so many of their ideas and arguments are completely ludicrous.

Closing Music on podcast provided by The Dead Cat Bounce*

To help our show out, please support us on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/LibertyNeverSleeps

The money pledged thru Patreon.com will go toward show costs such as advertising, server time, and broadcasting equipment. If we can get
enough listeners, we will expand the show to two hours and hire additional staff.

All bumper music and sound clips are not owned by the show, are commentary, and of educational purposes, or de minimus effect, and not for monetary gain.

No copyright is claimed in any use of such materials and to the extent that material may appear to be infringed, I assert that such alleged infringement is permissible under fair use principles in U.S. copyright laws. If you believe material has been used in an unauthorized manner, please contact the poster.

On this episode of Liberty Never Sleeps,

U.S. jobless claims graph on a tablet screen. (Photo: AdobeStock)

The advance figure for seasonally adjusted initial claims rose 6,000 to 229,000 for the week ending March 9. The 4-week moving average was 223,750, a decline of 2,500.

Both figures for the previous week were unrevised.

The advance seasonally adjusted insured unemployment rate was unchanged at a very low 1.2% for the week ending March 2.

No state was triggered “on” the Extended Benefits program during the week ending February 23.

The highest insured unemployment rates in the week ending February 23 were in Alaska (3.1), New Jersey (2.8), Rhode Island (2.8), Connecticut (2.6), Montana (2.6), Massachusetts (2.5), Pennsylvania (2.3), California (2.2), Illinois (2.2), and West Virginia (2.2).

The largest increases in initial claims for the week ending March 2 were in New York (+16,253), California (+6,636), Pennsylvania (+1,774), Oregon (+1,576), and Georgia (+661), while the largest decreases were in Massachusetts (-4,196), Kentucky (-3,117), Washington (-1,185), Rhode Island (-1,100), and Michigan (-756).

The advance for seasonally adjusted initial claims

New residential construction, hew homes, housing starts, building permits, depicted on blueprints. (Photo: AdobeStock)
New residential construction, hew homes, housing starts, building permits, depicted on blueprints. (Photo: AdobeStock)

Construction spending in January more than quadrupled the consensus at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of $1,279.6, 1.3% higher than December. Total construction spending for January was 0.3% higher than last year’s estimate of $1,276.3 billion.

The consensus forecast was looking for a 0.3% gain for the month, with forecasts ranging from a low of -0.4% to a high of 1.0%.

Private Construction

Spending on private construction was at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of $966.0 billion, 0.2% higher than the revised December estimate of $964.2 billion.

Residential construction was at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of $511.4 billion in January, which is 0.3% less than the revised estimate of $512.9 billion for December.

Nonresidential construction was at a seasonally adjusted annual rate
of $454.7 billion, or 0.8% higher than the revised December estimate of $451.2 billion.

Public Construction

In January, the estimated seasonally adjusted annual rate of public construction spending was $313.6 billion, 4.9% higher than the revised estimate of $299.0 billion for December.

Educational construction was at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of $77.8 billion, 2.2% above the revised December estimate of $76.1 billion.

Highway construction was at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of $99.9 billion, 11.8% above the revised estimate of $89.3 billion in December.

Construction spending more than quadrupled the consensus

American Manufacturing Sector Graphic Concept. (Photo: AdobeStock)
American Manufacturing Sector Graphic Concept. (Photo: AdobeStock)

Durable goods orders in the U.S. rose unexpectedly $0.9 billion in January, or 0.4% to $255.3 billion, easily beating the consensus forecast. Core-durable goods also beat the mark, rising 0.8%.

Durable goods do not need to be purchased frequently because they are designed to last for three years or more.

The consensus forecast was calling for a -0.6% decline, ranging from a low of -3.0% to a high of 1.8%. For the core, consensus forecast was calling for a 0.1 gain, ranging from a low of 0.0% to a high of 0.5%.

“There is nothing not to like in the Durable goods report,” Tim Anderson, analyst at TJM Investments said. “I interpret non-defense capital goods as being CapEx spending by industrial manufacturers.”

“New orders are a leading indicator. Shipments are a lagging indicator.”

Unfilled Orders

Unfilled goods orders for manufactured durable goods were up after three consecutive declines, rising $1.4 billion or 0.1% to $1,181.9 billion. It followed a 0.1% decrease in December.

Transportation equipment was also up after three straightly monthly decreases, leading the charge with a $0.9 billion gain, or 0.1% to $811.6 billion.

Inventories

Inventories of manufactured durable goods have been up twenty‐four of the last twenty‐five months, and gained $1.7 billion or 0.4% to $417.0 billion in January. That follows a 0.3% December increase.

Transportation equipment have been up four of the last five months, and also led the way by gaining $1.2 billion, or 0.9% to $132.6 billion.

Capital Goods

Non-defense new orders for capital goods in rose $2.0 billion or 2.5% to $80.3 billion in January. Shipments decreased $1.3 billion or 1.6% to $78.4 billion.

Unfilled orders gained $1.9 billion or 0.3% to $711.0 billion. Inventories rose $0.9 billion or 0.5% to $182.8 billion.

Defense new orders for capital goods decreased $0.3 billion or 2.3% to $12.5 billion.

Shipments increased $0.4 billion or 3.4% to $13.0 billion. Unfilled orders decreased $0.5 billion or 0.3% to $156.0 billion, while inventories gained $0.4 billion or 1.6% to $23.0 billion.

Revisions

Revised seasonally adjusted December figures for all manufacturing industries were as follows:

  • new orders, $500.1 billion (revised from $499.9 billion);
  • shipments, $504.9 billion (unchanged);
  • unfilled orders, $1,180.5 billion (revised from $1,180.3 billion) and
  • total inventories, $681.8 billion (revised from $681.5 billion).

Durable goods orders in the U.S. rose

LNS Host Tom Purcell Hammers Elitism Following College Cheating Scandal

On this episode of Liberty Never Sleeps, Tom explains how the college cheating scandal shows elitism and liberalism are the real privileges in today’s world, not skin color.

*The Offensive Offense
*Buying A Degree
*White Privilege? Let’s Talk.
*Is Amazon and Tech a Monopoly?
*Coulter and Trump
*Boeing Max Failures

Podcast Bumper Music:

Billy Don’t BE a Hero- Paper Lace
Fallin in Love- Joe Frank and Reynolds
Skyfall- Adele
Rich Girl- Hall and Oates
What is Love- Haddaway
All I Wanna Do- Sheryl Crow
Life’s Been Good- Joe Walsh

Closing Music on podcast provided by The Dead Cat Bounce*

To help our show out, please support us on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/LibertyNeverSleeps

The money pledged thru Patreon.com will go toward show costs such as advertising, server time, and broadcasting equipment. If we can get
enough listeners, we will expand the show to two hours and hire additional staff.

All bumper music and sound clips are not owned by the show, are commentary, and of educational purposes, or de minimus effect, and not for monetary gain.

No copyright is claimed in any use of such materials and to the extent that material may appear to be infringed, I assert that such alleged infringement is permissible under fair use principles in U.S. copyright laws. If you believe material has been used in an unauthorized manner, please contact the poster.

On this episode of Liberty Never Sleeps,

Former attorney Michael Cohen stands behind Donald Trump. (Photo: Screenshot Google News)
Former attorney Michael Cohen stands behind Donald Trump. (Photo: Screenshot Google News)

Anti-Trump big media went into carpet-chewing, curtain-climbing overdrive with the Cohen testimony and the “manifest failure and humiliation over the breakdown” of the U.S.-North Korean summit.

By “anti-Trump big media, I of course was referring to “all of them.” To be fair, then-candidate Trump received the endorsement of just one newspaper.

Michael Cohen–an admitted perjurer, convicted felon and whose testimony may yet again land him with further jail time for additional perjury charges–was treated by big media as the oracle of righteousness.

Anyone typically is if they are against Donald Trump, who Mr. Cohen declared in his opening statement to be a “racist, liar and cheat.”

Not having enough raw meat to chew on and bones to toss to ravenous hordes of coastal liberal elite, the Democratic-dominated big media complex was gleeful for having seemingly cut into Trump’s expected glory.

They painted the summit as an expected nuclear disarmament ecstasy that broke down due to Chairman Kim Jong Un’s intransigence over inspection and verification. A New Yorker headline blared, “A humiliating 24 hours for Trump as talks break down.”

The 99.9% of newspaper endorsements for Hillary Clinton in the 2016 election should have made it utterly clear big media is not only a toothless tiger but now bears a clear resemblance to a cartoon tiger, rather than one defanged by the circus.

The clearest confirmation of this now-obvious fact is an examination of President Trump’s aggregate approval rating on Real Clear Politics (RCP).

On February 27, the day before Cohen’s testimony–a day replete with media hysteria on the forthcoming spectacle–President Trump’s approval rating was 43.9%. Ten days later on Friday  March 8–a time frame that allows for lagging polling to work its way through and statistical noise to flatten out–his approval rating was 43.5%.

In point of fact, the polling period has been positive for President Trump. RCP aggregates all polls it considers worthy of including in its aggregation, which includes outlets that survey “all voters” which consistently undervalues Trump’s support, as well as the more realistic “registered and likely voters” samples.

It is significant that as election days draw near the “all voters” outlets switch to registered or likely voters as they shift from partisanship to trying to keep at least some small degree of credibility by trying to match actual outcomes.

An analysis of only those polls that report registered and likely voters show President Trump–coming off a low period off about 44% aggregate approval–had moved up marginally to 45%, a new ascending base.

It was sitting at 46% as of this writing.

The median effect was in effect zero on public opinion but it was probably good for the bottom line, which is of course what it is all about as any pretense of “journalistic integrity” vanished years ago.

At the end of the day, it is as it nearly always is: “it’s the economy stupid”. The rest is just entertainment for partisans.

The media criticism over Michael Cohen's testimony

People's Pundit Daily
You have %%pigeonMeterAvailable%% free %%pigeonCopyPage%% remaining this month. Get unlimited access and support reader-funded, independent data journalism.

Start a 14-day free trial now. Pay later!

Start Trial